Outbreak Epidemiology Course Boosts Crisis Preparedness

The Centre for Health Crises at Karolinska Institutet works to ensure that experience gained from working on health crises internationally can be transformed to benefit Sweden's crisis preparedness. As part of this, they have conducted a one-day training course on global outbreak epidemiology in collaboration with the Swedish Red Cross. Its aim is to provide further education for people who have worked on projects abroad.

On 28 March, 15 participants gathered at the Red Cross' office in Stockholm for a one-day course in global outbreak epidemiology. The course, developed by the Centre for Health Crises, provides participants with an introduction to how disease outbreaks arise, spread and develop, as well as tools for assessing and managing them in a structured and critical manner. Thanks to the Centre's new collaboration with the Swedish Red Cross, the course has been adapted to suit people who have previous experience of working in projects in health crises abroad. Those who took part this time had a mixed professional background, ranging from project managers and physicians specialised in infectious diseases, to experts in water and sanitation.

Positive feedback on course that combines lecture and practical group exercise

The day began with a lecture on how to investigate and manage outbreaks of infectious diseases. After lunch, participants had the opportunity to put what they had learnt into practice in a group exercise where they had to manage a case of a disease outbreak. Since the course is just one day, it focused primarily on understanding the practical principles for investigating and managing outbreaks of various types of infectious diseases, as well as on decision-making in situations where information is limited.

Woman with blonde hair wearing a blue top standing in front of a building with a glass front
Caroline de Groot - collaboration coordinator at the Centre for Health Crises Photo: Evelina Björninen

- We received a lot of positive feedback on the course from everyone who took part, and we look forward to continuing to develop both the course and our collaboration with the Swedish Red Cross, says Caroline de Groot , collaboration coordinator at the Centre for Health Crises, who has worked on the course along with the Centre's expert coordinator in outbreak preparedness and response, Hedvig Glans .

The course is part of the Centre for Health Crises' programme area on education, called the Health Crisis Academy, which collates, conducts, and develops educational initiatives aimed at strengthening skills that lead to improved preparedness for future health crises, both in Sweden and globally.

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